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Fire Arrows
"Travelers on the prairie
have often seen the Indians throwing up
signal lights at night, and have wondered
how it was done.... They take off the head
of the arrow and dip the shaft in gunpowder,
mixed with glue.... The gunpowder adheres to
the wood, and coats it three or four inches
from its end to the depth of one-fourth of
an inch. Chewed bark mixed with dry
gunpowder is then fastened to the stick, and
the arrow is ready for use. When it is to be
fired, a warrior places it on his bowstring
and draws his bow ready to let it fly; the
point of the arrow is then lowered, another
warrior lights the dry bark, and it is shot
high in the air. When it has gone up a
little distance, it bursts out into a flame,
and burns brightly until it falls to the
ground. Various meanings are attached to
these fire-arrow signals. Thus, one arrow
meant, among the Santees, 'The enemy are
about'; two arrows from the same point,
'Danger'; three, 'Great danger'; many, 'They
are too strong, or we are falling back'; two
arrows sent up at the same moment, 'We will
attack'; three, 'Soon'; four, 'Now'; if shot
diagonally, 'In that direction.' These
signals are constantly changed, and are
always agreed upon when the party goes out
or before it separates. The Indians send
their signals very intelligently, and seldom
make mistakes in telegraphing each other by
these silent monitors. The amount of
information they can communicate by fires
and burning arrows is perfectly wonderful.
Every war party carries with it bundles of
signal arrows." (Belden, The White Chief;
or Twelve Years among the Wild Indians of
the Plains. Cincinnati and New York,
1871, pp. 106, 107.)
With regard to the above, it is possible
that white influence has been felt in the
mode of signaling as well as in the use of
gunpowder, but it would be interesting to
learn if any Indians adopted a similar
expedient before gunpowder was known to
them. They frequently used arrows, to which
flaming material was attached, to set fire
to the wooden houses of the early colonists.
The Caribs were acquainted with this same
mode of destruction as appears by the
following quotation:
"Their arrows were commonly poisoned, except
when they made their military excursions by
night; on these occasions they converted
them into instruments of still greater
mischief; for, by arming the points with
pledgets of cotton dipped in oil, and set on
fire, they fired whole villages of their
enemies at a distance." (Alcedo. The
Geograph. and Hist. Dict. of America and the
West Indies. Thompson's trans. London,
1812, Vol. I, p. 314.)
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Sign Language
Among North American Indians Compared with
that Among Other Peoples and Deaf-Mutes,
1881
Indian Sign
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